80 Staff Members At Delhi Hospital Test Covid+ve In A Month, Doctor Dies 80 Staff Members At Delhi Hospital Test Covid+ve In A Month, Doctor Dies This comes at a time when the city hospitals are overwhelmed due to a surge in coronavirus cases and an increased patient count.
Dr AK Rawat, the surgeon who was vaccinated, died of Covid yesterday
New Delhi:
Around 80 medical personnel and a surgeon at Delhi s Saroj Super Speciality Hospital have tested positive for the coronavirus over the last month. Dr AK Rawat, the surgeon who was vaccinated, died of COVID-19 on Saturday. He was 58.
Dr Manisha Jadhav
MUMBAI: A 51-year-old senior medical officer from Sewri TB hospital died of Covid-19 late on Monday, around 36 hours after posting her parting words on Facebook.
Dr Manisha Jadhav, fondly remembered for her efficient juggling of clinical and administrative roles, became the first doctor from the civic health setup to die of the infection. According to the Indian Medical Association, nearly 18,000 doctors have contracted Covid and 168 have died in the state since last March, but few have been adequately compensated.
On Sunday, Jadhav wrote a Facebook post from her ICU bed saying this could be her last greeting. May be last Good Morning. I may not meet you here on this platform. Take care all. Body dies. Soul doesn t. Soul is immortal, she wrote.
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The New York Times scapegoats medical workers in the tragic death of Dr. Susan Moore
The
New York Times has used Dr. Moore’s tragic death to promote its racialist narrative of American society and the COVID-19 pandemic.
On December 23, the
Times published a sensationalist article by John Eligon under the headline, “Black Doctor Dies of COVID-19 After Complaining of Racist Treatment.” Without any investigation into the circumstances of the case, the
Times sought to hold up Dr. Moore’s death as an example of a vicious form of racism that pervades the health care industry.
“Lying in a hospital bed with an oxygen tube hugging her nostrils,” Eligon begins his article, “the Black patient gazed into her smartphone and, with a strained voice, complained of an experience all too common among Black people in America.”